Opinion by
The question presented * by this appeal concerns the construction of the will and codicil of John Randall, as well as a certain written agreement entered into by him during his lifetime with the Honesdale National Bank, in. order to ascertain whether the trust created by these instruments has terminated because of a breach of an express condition subsequent, or failure of the paramount purposе which decedent had in view, and the property, therefore, permitted to revert to the appellees, as next of kin of the testator. The learned Orphans’ Court of Wayne County, after hearing upon petition, citation and answer, entered its preliminary decree determining that the entire trust had failed and ordering a final accounting by the trustees. From the final decree dismissing their exceptions and affirming the preliminary decree, the trustees have appealed.
The testator, John Randall, died March 29, 1922, and by his will dated March 17, 1921, provided, among other things not pertinent to this issue, as follows:
“Fifth: — That certain tract of land known as the *505 Jerico Farm, consisting of about one hundred seventy-five acres (175) more or less, situate in the Township of Buckingham, County of Wayne, State of Pennsylvania, ... I give in trust to the said Township of Buckingham, its successors and assigns to be used and occupied as a home for the poor of the said Township of Buckingham to be known as the ‘John Randall Memorial Home’. It shall be managed and controlled by three trustees or a majority of them, composed of two supervisors of the poor of the Township and my wife Fannie Bandall, who shall serve until her deceаse and after her death the president of the school board of Buckingham Township and his successor or successors in office shall be her successor said board to be known as ‘The Board of Trustees of the John Randall Home’.
“Sixth: — I direct that all revenue derived from the farm of the said Home and the trust herein created shall be for the use and benefit and purpose of sаid Home but the principal shall remain intact and shall not be disturbed, only income therefrom shall be used for the benefit of said trust and upon the failure to use the said land for the said Home or should the purpose of this trust fail for any reason whatsoever, I do hereby direct that the said property and trust created for said purpose shall revert to my estate and shall go to my neаrest next of kin then living.
“Seventh: — For the purpose of carrying out the purpose of said trust and for the maintenance of said Home, I hereby direct my executors hereinafter named and do hereby give them authority and power to convert all my real and personal property of which I may die possessed of and not otherwise herein disposed of into cash or othеr good and sufficient securities at any time as in their judgment shall seem best. . . .
“Eighth: — I do hereby direct that the proceeds of said sale or sales shall be invested for the benefit of said trust and for the use and benefit of the said John Randall Memorial Home, or for the benefit of the poor *506 of Buckingham Township only, it being my intention that the poor of said Township who cannot become inmates of said Home shall be benefited by said trust, all lands, securities or property whatever acquired shall be used for the purpose and benefit of said trust.
“Ninth: — The buildings now on said farm must be improved and kept in repair if need be and if necessary new buildings can be erected for the comfortable habitation and maintenance of the inmates.”
On October 22, 1921, Randall added a codicil to his will, the pertinent portion of which is as follows: “I, John Randall, . . . hereby instruct my executor to deposit in the Honesdale National Bank an amount sufficient to create a fund of $15,000.00, one-quarter of the income on same to be added to the principal quarterly and three-quarters of the income to be paid quarterly to the Officers of The John Randall Memorial Home; this fund to bе irrevocable.”
On October 27, 1921, Randall entered into an agreement with the Honesdale National Bank, providing, inter alia, as follows: “That the Party of the First Part, Mr. John Randall, . . . desires to deposit in the Hones-dale National Bank, Fifteen Thousand ($15,000.00) Dollars, subject to his control during his natural lifetime, but upon his demise the fund to be irrevocable, and the income amounting to $600.00 per year to be рaid by the Honesdale National Bank as follows: One quarter of the income, viz., $150.00 to be added each year to the principal of the fund, and three quarters of the income, viz., $450.00 to be paid in quarterly installments to the Officers of the John Randall Memorial Home, . . . and their Successors in Office.”
The appellees, nieces and nephews of Randall, contend that the trust has terminаted by non-user and noncompliance with the terms of the will and codicil, as well as the agreement inter vivos, and that under paragraph Sixth of the will that the trust property should revert to the estate of the testator. The appellants, the trus *507 tees, strenuously argue that the trust has not terminated, but has been executed in its present manner by virtue of necessity; and furthermore, that the trust is a general one for the benefit of the poor of the Township of Buckingham and should be maintained either as at present administered or under some modified manner devised by the court or by an auditor appointed by it.
The learned court below, after considering the provisions of the will, codicil and agreement and examining the testimony adduced at the hearing in regard to the mаnner in which the trust has been administered since Randall’s death, found as a fact that the directions for the use of the real estate had not been complied with and that under such circumstances the maintenance of a fund for its support as set forth in the will, codicil and inter vivos agreement was thus rendered but a nullity, and for that reason the trust in its entirety has ceased and determined and should, therefore, revert to the testator’s estate. With this conclusion we are in accord.
While we realize that to sustain the contention of appellees would work a forfeiture, which, in really doubtful cases, the courts will not do:
Jor dan’s Estate,
In ascertaining whether the trust here involved was intended to be a specific or general one for charity, we must seek the testator’s intention from an examination of the will and its codicil as one instrument:
Dutton’s Estate,
Appellants rely on the isolated expression “. . .or for the benefit of the poor of Buckingham Township only . . .”, used by testator in the Eighth paragraph of his will, as the primary support for their contention that decedent contemplated aid or benefit to the poor generally of thе community. We find no merit in such argument, for a careful study of the entire paragraph from which this excerpt is taken makes it clearly apparent that the poor for whose benefit the trust was intended to be created are those “who cannot become inmates of said Home.” Obviously this latter qualification cannot be ignored since it presupposes the continuеd existence of the “John Randall Memorial Home”. The establishment and maintenance of the Home was the main purpose of the trust — the other portion as to those who could not secure accommodation therein was merely ancillary to this principal object. Furthermore, the phraseology contained in the entire will, the codicil and the agreement fortifies this conclusion.
From the foregoing it can readily be observed that the property was placed in trust for a specific use— the establishment of the “John Randall Memorial Home” — and that this was a condition subsequent upon which the trust was to continue cannot properly be questioned. It is well settled that whether a condition shall be construed as precedent or subsеquent depends upon the testator’s intention as expressed in his will; and the fact that the time of the performance is indefinite leads to the conclusion that the condition
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was intended to be subsequent:
Thompson’s Estate,
In the instant case, the trust conditionally vested upon its acceptance by the trustees, who were bound by the condition provided by the testator. It was, however, defeated when the trustees, as found by the learned court below, failed to establish the Home, for the will expressly provides “. . . upon the failure to use the said land for the said Home or should the purpose of this trust fail for any reason whatsoever, I do hereby direct that the said propеrty and trust created for said purpose shall revert to my estate and shall go to my nearest next of kin then living.” Relative to such provisions, we said, in
Penna. Horticultural Society v. Craig,
Although admitted by both appellants and appellees, nevertheless, it might be well to here state that the doctrine of cy pres has no application in the instant case, since testator expressly provided for the reverter upon the failure of the trustees to use the land as a Home:
Seitz v. Seitz,
Particularly apropos to the facts of the instant case is
Bowden v.
Brown,
As to the fund in the Honesdale National Bank, representing trust moneys deposited by the decedent during his lifetime under the agreement inter vivos, and by his executor under the provisions of the codicil, we are satisfied, as cоncluded by the learned court below, that since the direction for the use of the real estate had not been complied with and therefore that portion of the trust failed, these trust funds, the income from which was to be paid “to the officers of the John Bandall
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Memorial Home”, must also revert to the decedent’s estate. Since no further disposition of this income was direсted either by the inter vivos agreement or by the codicil, it follows that the product of the fund was to be applied to the same uses contemplated by the will itself, that is, the establishment and maintenance of the “John Randall Memorial Home”:
Baughman’s Estate,
The appellants further contend that the disposition of that portion of the trust funds, comprising the proceeds obtained from the conversion of testator’s other estate under the provisions of paragraph Seventh of Ms will, on deposit in the Scranton-Lackawanna Trust Company, was rendered res judicata by the report of the Auditor in 1928. With such argument we cannot agree. The auditor, appointed solely to distribute these funds then in the hands of the executor of testator, recommended thаt they be placed in the Scranton-Lackawanna Trust Company “. . . with instructions that the said fund be maintained in perpetuity, the income thereof, only, be paid to the Overseers of the Poor of Buckingham township [later modified to read “Board of Trustees of the John Randall Home”] for the support of the Poor of Buckingham township, and for necessary repairs of ‘John Randall Mеmorial Home.’ ” Appellants erroneously argue that this constitutes a finding that the primary purpose of the testator was general poor relief of the township and that such find *513 ing binds appellees under the doctrine of res judicata. There was no controversy before the auditor outside of the distribution of the funds in the hands of the executor, and the breadth or scope оf the intention of the testator in the creation of the trust in question was not in any way. involved. No such issue was then contemplated or presented in any form. In the present proceeding, where the intention of the testator is for the first time in issue, the auditor’s recommendation cannot be accorded the effect of broadening or increasing the purpose of the testаtor.
Furthermore, the fact that, at the hearing before the auditor, the heirs and next of kin of the testator had no notice, were not present, not l’epresented by counsel, and no circumstance as to the contemplation of the testator in the creation of the trust here under consideration was involved, precludes any ruling of res judicata. See
Cameron Bank v. Aleppo Twp.,
The trustees argue, finally, that the next of kin are barred by laches. Apart from the fact that this question was not raised in the court below
(Parke v. Pa. T. & F. M. Cas. Ins. Co.,
The decree is affirmed; costs to be paid out of the fund. The record is remitted to the court below to determine reasonable attorney’s fees for services contracted for by the trustees and for services to be rendered in the preparation and filing of the final account, the same to be paid out of the fund.
Notes
Cоunsel for the parties stipulated at the hearing before the court below as follows: “We stipulate that the present issue in the case is whether or not the trust or any part of the trust, the real estate, the general fund or the fund in the National Bank should be terminated and distributed among the heirs of John Randall or whether it should be continued as a general charitable trust either in its present form or in some other form.”
